Lost skier copied TV survival practices

Tuesday

Mar 5, 2013 at 8:00 AMMar 5, 2013 at 11:08 PM

A snowmobiler who found a skier who had been missing for two days in Maine says the 17-year-old knew how to stay alive from watching a survival show on TV. Nicholas Joy also told his rescuer, Warwick, Mass., volunteer firefighter Joseph Paul, that he drank from a stream and used hemlock branches to build a shelter.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A snowmobiler who found a skier who had been missing for two days in Maine says the 17-year-old knew how to stay alive from watching a survival show on TV.

Nicholas Joy also told his rescuer, Warwick, Mass., volunteer firefighter Joseph Paul, that he drank from a stream and used hemlock branches to build a shelter.

Paul says the skier flagged him down on a snowmobile trail about 8:30 a.m. Tuesday.

He says he gave the teenager some peanuts and crackers to eat before whisking him 4 miles down a mountain trail to an ambulance.

Paul says the teenager from Medford, Mass., was cold and hungry, but otherwise in "really good shape."

Joy told his rescuer he got lost after cutting through the woods to try to save time after a backcountry ski trail ended.

Joy was taken to Franklin Memorial Hospital in Farmington for evaluation, said Lt. Kevin Adam, the search coordinator.

The weather conditions were bad enough that the search had to be suspended Sunday and Monday nights, and Joy survived by building a mound of snow that he fashioned into a shelter that he could crawl into, Adam said.

Joy was in "remarkably good shape" for spending two nights out, and it helped that the winds weren't as strong in the valley where he was found as they were up on the mountain, Adam said.

"But he did the right thing in building a snow cave, and obviously he's still alive to talk about it, so he made some good decisions," Adam said.

Joy and his father split up on Sunday after taking a chairlift to the top of the mountain and took separate trails down in what was going to be the last run of the day, officials said. They planned to meet in the Sugarloaf parking lot and drive back to Massachusetts, and the father called for help when his son didn't show up.

It turned out that the boy inadvertently skied off his trail and ventured down the west side of the mountain before realizing he couldn't make it back to ski trails, Adam said.

The warden service, the Sugarloaf ski patrol, the Maine Forest Service, the U.S. Border Patrol, area rescue squads, Carrabassett Valley Academy ski volunteers and others had been searching for Joy on skis, snowshoes and snowmobiles, officials said.

When Paul brought Joy to an awaiting ambulance, the boy had a tearful reunion with his parents. David Leaming, a photographer for the Morning Sentinel newspaper, heard Joy say to his father: "I'm OK. I'm just tired."

Sugarloaf General Manager John Diller said he cried when he heard Joy was found. "It was almost like a miracle," he said.

Diller said one of his staff members heard Joy say he liked to watch TV survival shows. "Maybe that's a little bit of what helped him organize," he said.

One or two skiers get lost and are reported missing at Sugarloaf most winters, with skiers sometimes spending a night in the outdoors before being found. In a highly publicized case three years ago, four teenage snowboarders got lost after going out of bounds into ungroomed expert terrain, but they survived a cold night in dense woods and deep snow by continually moving around to stay warm.